Seasoning Cast Iron

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mattl

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Since this topic has come up several times I thought it deserves a separate thread-- perhaps it's already had one.

Anyway I came across a great posting about seasoning and thought I'd post a link to it. It seems to get into a lot of detail and if I need to season a pan that is the method I'll use.

Here is a bit:

Start With the Right Oil (It’s Not What You Think)
I’ve read dozens of Web pages on how to season cast iron, and there is no consensus in the advice. Some say vegetable oils leave a sticky surface and to only use lard. Some say animal fat gives a surface that is too soft and to only use vegetable oils. Some say corn oil is the only fat to use, or Crisco, or olive oil. Some recommend bacon drippings since lard is no longer readily available. Some say you must use a saturated fat – that is, a fat that is solid at room temperature, whether it’s animal or vegetable (palm oil, coconut oil, Crisco, lard). Some say never use butter. Some say butter is fine. Some swear by Pam (spray-on canola oil with additives). Some say the additives in Pam leave a residue at high temperatures and pure canola oil is best. Some say it doesn’t matter what oil you use.

They are all wrong. It does matter what oil you use, and the oil that gives the best results is not in this list. So what is it? Here are some hints: What oil do artists mix with pigment for a high quality oil paint that dries hard and glassy on the canvas? What oil is commonly used by woodturners to give their sculptures a protective, soft-sheen finish? It’s the same oil. Now what is the food-grade equivalent of this oil?

The oil used by artists and woodturners is linseed oil. The food-grade equivalent is called flaxseed oil. This oil is ideal for seasoning cast iron for the same reason it’s an ideal base for oil paint and wood finishes. It’s a “drying oil”, which means it can transform into a hard, tough film. This doesn’t happen through “drying” in the sense of losing moisture through evaporation. The term is actually a misnomer. The transformation is through a chemical process called “polymerization”.

The seasoning on cast iron is formed by fat polymerization, fat polymerization is maximized with a drying oil, and flaxseed oil is the only drying oil that’s edible. From that I deduced that flaxseed oil would be the ideal oil for seasoning cast iron.

 
My mom used suet in the early 40s, baked them for two days, and the only skillet that developed rust was the one she used to put in the oven with water while baking pies. I took steel wool to the rust and we used it with fat a few times and it is working to this day. It was the one Griswald skillet that she had. All the rest were Wagner.
 
I'm not sure that drying to a polymerized film makes much difference when a fat or oil is chosen for seasoning a cast iron pan. The reason is that everything but the carbon in the oil is driven off by the heat of the seasoning process, and the carbon is turned into a hard graphite like substance. All the hydrogen-carbon bonds that distinguish a fat from an oil are gone by that point, I would think.

More important I would think is that the metal surface be free of rust and either bare metal or previous good carbonized surface.
 
I have seasoned a few cast iron skillets and a griddle, and I just coated them with oil, put them upside down outside on the gas grill and cooked them on high for about an hour. Then let everything cool before moving them. It worked well, nothing sticks.
 

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